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October, 2012:

Tobacco ban for Leeds shop flouting rules

http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/news/latest-news/top-stories/tobacco-ban-for-leeds-shop-flouting-rules-1-5070384

DEFENCE: Hari Amedi told the court he tried to train his staff but they couldnt tell the age of white people

DEFENCE: Hari Amedi told the court he tried to train his staff but they couldnt tell the age of white people

By Sophie Hazan
Published on Saturday 27 October 2012 09:14

A shopkeeper who had a ban slapped on his shop to stop the sale of cigarettes to children blamed foreign staff who were unable to tell the age of “white people”.

Hari Amedi, 34, who owns the Monalisa international food store on Armley Town Street, told Leeds magistrates yesterday (Oct 26) he did not know how he could stop members of staff from selling tobacco to children.

The 34-year-old, who lives at Cross Flats Grove in Beeston, south Leeds, said the biggest problem had been that employees, who are not British-born, have difficulty recognising the age of locals.

Amedi, who represented himself, said in mitigation: “In my job I explained not to sell to people underage but if they do make a mistake I don’t know what I can do.

“I spend one hour every week to tell them not to and told them they are responsible but because they are from a different country they don’t recognise the age of English white people.”

Amedi was found guilty last month at Leeds Magistrates court of the sale of a packet of 10 Superkings to a 14-year-old girl on February 13 in his absence.

It was the third time in 18 months that undercover officers from West Yorkshire Trading Standards had witnessed cigarettes being sold to an underage customer at theMonalisa, said Derek Hallam, prosecuting.

Amedi was told yesterday to empty the shop’s shelves of all tobacco products for a period of six months. He was also fined £335, told to pay £1,496 in court costs and a £15 victim’s surcharge.

Mr Hallam added that while Amedi did not sell the cigarettes to the underage purchasers, he was still responsibile for training staff.

David Marlow, chairman of the bench, said: “We believe the restriction will ensure you get your signage or staff training in place so this doesn’t happen again.”

Amedi previously failed to complete a training seminar offered by West Yorkshire Trading Standards to help with cigarette sales. And he has failed to action the Challenge 21 policy that demands staff check a customer’s proof of age where they appear to be under 21.

China Leader’s Job at Odds With Tobacco Ties, Brookings Says

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-10-25/china-leader-s-job-at-odds-with-tobacco-ties-brookings-says-1-.html

The brother of Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang, who oversees public health, should be removed from his post as a top official in China’s state-owned tobacco monopoly to avoid conflicts of interest, a report published by the Washington-based Brookings Institution said.

Li, set to succeed Wen Jiabao as premier early next year, could boost his reputation as a populist leader and deflect criticism from rivals if his younger brother, Li Keming, is transferred from his position as deputy director at China’s State Tobacco Monopoly Administration, Cheng Li, a Brookings senior fellow, wrote in a report. He said Li Keming’s prominent role in the agency that runs the world’s biggest tobacco company may have set back efforts to control tobacco in the country.

Enlarge image

Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang

Ed Jones/Pool via Bloomberg

Li Keqiang, China’s vice premier.

Li Keqiang, China’s vice premier. Photographer: Ed Jones/Pool via Bloomberg

Public opinion in China is becoming more important on social issues including health, environmental protection andfood safety

, Brookings’s Li said today. China has more than 300 million smokers, and at least 1.2 million die from smoking-related diseases each year, a figure set to rise to 2 million a year by 2020, according to the report, released two weeks before China begins a once-a-decade leadership transition.

“In all these areas, I think leaders should set examples,” Brookings’s Li said in an interview. “Particularly now that many countries, including Russia and India, are paying more attention to public health issues.”

Government Revenue

The tobacco industry is more difficult to control because China’s government gets so much revenue — 600 billion yuan ($96 billion) in 2011 — from it, the report said. The industry, which makes 2.3 trillion cigarettes a year, consistently contributes 7 to 10 percent of annual government revenues, according to the report.

Brookings, a private nonpartisan research group based inWashington, got funding for the study from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundationthrough the China Medical Board, an American foundation that seeks to advance health in China. Cheng Li is research director for Brookings’s John L. Thornton China Center, where he studies China’s elite politics. He dedicated the report to his brother, who died of smoking-related causes.

“Paradoxically, Li’s personal/family ties with the tobacco industry might have prevented him from making a real effort to constrain cigarette production and consumption in the country,”Brookings’s Li wrote in the report.

Market Control

The State Tobacco Monopoly Administration both runs and regulates China National Tobacco Corp., the world’s biggest cigarette maker with a market share about the size of Philip Morris International Inc. (PM) and British American Tobacco Plc (BATS)combined, the report said. The STMA should be separated from China National Tobacco and the industry should have a new regulator, the report recommended.

A person contacted by phone at the State Tobacco Monopoly in Beijing who didn’t identify herself said the administration doesn’t accept interview requests from foreign reporters. Li Keming didn’t respond to a faxed request for comment sent to a number on the monopoly’s website. Vice Premier Li Keqiang didn’t respond to a faxed request for comment made to the State Council Information Office in Beijing.

The volume of cigarettes sold in China is expected to keep rising from 2011 to 2015, London-based researcher Euromonitor International said in July 2011. It forecast China’s tobacco market will grow at an average 14 percent a year to hit 1.8 trillion yuan in retail sales in 2015, about the gross domestic product of Malaysia last year.

China National Tobacco controlled 97.9 percent of the domestic market in 2010, according to Euromonitor.

Tobacco Monopoly

Executives at the state tobacco monopoly, which also acts as a regulator, tout the cigarette industry’s growth like that of any state-dominated field such as steel or telecommunications.

The monopoly’s director, Jiang Chengkang, said on a visitto northeast China last year that the tobacco industry needed to“make new breakthroughs in technological innovation” and“improve product taste and development,” according to China National Tobacco’s website.

Li Keqiang’s tobacco ties stand in contrast to the family of his future boss, Vice President Xi Jinping, who is set to take over as general secretary of the Communist Party at its congress next month and president next year. Xi’s wife, the army folk singer Peng Liyuan, has served as an “Anti-Smoking Ambassador” along with basketball star Yao Ming for the Chinese Association on Tobacco Control.

“By doing so, she can help to gain popular support and political capital for her husband to consolidate his power,” Li said in the report. He said both Xi and Li Keqiang quit smoking“a couple of decades ago,” while 20 percent of the party’s 25-person Politburo still smoke.

Activist Efforts

Anti-tobacco activists have scored victories in China. In 2005, China ratified a World Health Organization initiative to reduce the production and consumption of tobacco, and Health Minister Chen Zhu was recognized by the WHO in July for his tobacco-control efforts.

China, which according to the report has a quarter of the world’s smokers, aims to ban cigarette advertising, promotions and sponsorship and raise tobacco product taxes and prices, the health ministry said in August. The country aims to cut the smoking rate among men to 40 percent by 2020 from 57 percent in 2002, the ministry said.

Those efforts are often stymied by China National Tobacco, which skirts advertising bans through charities and sponsorships, according to anti-tobacco activists. It funds schools throughout the country, including the Sichuan Tobacco Hope Primary School, the Xinhua News Agency reported last year.

Devastating Crisis

“Chinese authorities have been slow to acknowledge this increasingly devastating public health crisis,” Li’s report said. “Their hesitance to effectively curtail tobacco production and consumption is driven primarily by the fact that the tobacco industry is one of the largest sources of tax revenue for the Chinese government.”

Li Keming, who has worked in the tobacco industry for three decades, gets access to top officials when he travels across China, a fact that’s “highly unusual in terms of Chinese bureaucratic hierarchy and protocol,” Li wrote. One reason may be that local officials want to “curry favor with LiKeqiang,”he said.

Li Keqiang has told health ministry officials privately that tobacco control efforts can’t be real because of the industry’s contribution to the economy, according to the report, citing a conversation between Cheng Li and an unidentified public health official in 2011.

Zhejiang Visit

Li Keming visited coastal Zhejiang province in July, when he met Communist Party Secretary Zhao Hongzhu and other officials to “exchange views on the development of tobacco in Zhejiang,” according to a report on the tobacco monopoly’swebsite.

Brooking’s Li said in the interview that he hopes Li Keming“will be sensitive enough to volunteer to move to a different position, a different industry.”

“Chinese leaders in the future need to be sensitive about this; it’s in their best interest,” he said.

Transferring Li Keming out of the tobacco industry may make his older brother less vulnerable to political attack from rivals critical of his failure to curb tobacco more effectively while overseeing public health since 2008, the report said.

“Although the tobacco industry — a formidable vested interest group — may generate some political support for Li Keqiang, his family ties with the industry may become ammunition for his political rivals,” Li wrote.

The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, which provided information for the report, is a partner of the Bloomberg Initiative to Reduce Tobacco Use, funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies. Bloomberg Philanthropies was set up by New YorkMayor Michael Bloomberg, founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Michael Forsythe in Beijing at mforsythe@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg at phirschberg@bloomberg.net

Australia pension fund reviewing tobacco stake

http://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/-/world/15227151/australia-pension-fund-reviewing-tobacco-stake/

AFP October 25, 2012, 6:59 pm

Sydney, Sept 12, 2012 (AFP) – – The Australian government’s pension fund for public servants said Thursday it was reviewing its investment in tobacco shares following the passage of plain packaging laws in a bid to curb smoking.

The Future Fund, which manages some Aus$80 billion in retirement savings for government workers, said its board had requested a review of tobacco holdings worth Aus219 million in the light of Canberra’s new anti-smoking policies.

“We think it’s important, particularly given the responsibility for managing such a large pool of capital for the long term, that we take a careful, methodical and considered approach to these kinds of issues,” said Future Fund managing director Mark Burgess.

“This work has been started and will include consideration of the cost and implications of exclusion.”

Tobacco products in Australia will have to be sold in drab, uniform khaki packaging with graphic health warnings from December 1 after smoking giants lost a High Court challenge to the measures in August.

The fund has come under growing pressure to dump the shares after it was revealed in the Senate last week that new stock worth almost Aus$40 million was being bought at the same time the new policies were being pushed through.

Health groups and the left-wing Greens party have described the investment as inconsistent with public values.

The Australian government estimates there are 15,000 deaths nationally each year from tobacco-related illnesses and that smoking costs more than Aus$30 billion a year in healthcare and lost productivity.

The Future Fund has holdings in major firms including British American Tobacco, Imperial Tobacco, Japan Tobacco Inc and Philip Morris — all of whom were parties to the High Court challenge to Australia’s plain packet plan.

It has previously jettisoned holdings on ethical grounds, selling off its stock in 10 defence companies that manufactured cluster munitions and land-mines in 2011.

Similar moves against tobacco firms were taken by the Norwegian government’s pension fund in 2010.

— Dow Jones Newswires contributed to this report —

Walpole Health Board divided on tobacco age issue

http://www.wickedlocal.com/walpole/news/x346786123/Walpole-Health-Board-divided-on-tobacco-age-issue#axzz2AdiIlHMy

By Veronica Hamlett

Wicked Local Walpole

Posted Oct 25, 2012 @ 04:38 PM

WALPOLE —

The Board of Health will consider raising the local age to purchase tobacco from 18 to 21 years old after hearing a local pediatrician’s impassioned plea.

The board voted unanimously to open up Walpole’s tobacco regulations for change and will hold a public hearing on Jan. 8 before they make any decisions.

Though they agreed to get public input first, the board is divided on the issue. Chairman Bill Morris already gave his support to Dr. Lester Hartman, the Westwood physician who approached the board earlier this month.

Hartman is asking all Boston suburbs to consider raising the age from 18 to 21 to protect children from smoking’s harmful effects. Though they’re adults legally, 18-year-olds are still children in that their brains and bodies are still developing.

Morris agreed with Hartman’s case.

Board members Lisa Procaccini and Claire Wolfram think 18-year-olds should still be allowed to purchase tobacco.

“It’s not that I think they should be smoking. I just think, they’re adults,” Procaccini said. “They’re going to smoke if they want to smoke. That law isn’t going to change that.”

Wolfram didn’t see how upping the age in Walpole would reduce teen smoking, another reason Hartman is pushing for 21-year-olds to be able to buy cigarettes.

“I don’t think we should bother with this,” Wolfram said.

Board member Carol Johnson indicated she would support increasing the age, while fellow board member Richard Bringhurst said he had mixed feelings on the issue.

“I’m obviously opposed to anything that stunts growth,” said Bringhurst, also a doctor. “I think I am concerned about the economic impact on small businesses.”

The Board of Health will have the final say on changing the age. In 2010, the board voted to ban the sale of cigarettes and tobacco in pharmacies.

So far, only two towns have upped the allowable age. Needham first raised it to 21 and then amended it to 19. In July, Belmont raised their age to 19.

Hartman is hoping for a domino effect amongst Boston suburbs that will force the state to take notice

Read more: Walpole Health Board divided on tobacco age issue – Walpole, MA – Wicked Local Walpole http://www.wickedlocal.com/walpole/news/x346786123/Walpole-Health-Board-divided-on-tobacco-age-issue#ixzz2AdiOnPYy

Future Fund’s tobacco investments face chop

Clancy Yeates
Published: October 25, 2012 – 3:56PM

The taxpayer-owned Future Fund has put its $219 million in tobacco investments under review, and will consider the case for ditching the controversial holdings.

The $80 billion fund amassed its stake in big tobacco at the same time Labor was introducing its plain packaging laws, sparking criticism from health advocates and some members of the government.

But the fund’s managing director, Mark Burgess, today said the fund’s governance committee was considering the investment in cigarette manufacturers after a request from the board.

“This work has been started, and will include consideration of the costs and implications of exclusion as well as the board’s ability to…and responsibilities and obligations to act in this area,” Mr Burgess said.

“It’s early days in that process, but the committee will provide its findings to the board and the board will make a determination and this will be communicated publicly at the appropriate time.”

The Future Fund, a nest egg for future pension liabilities of public servants, holds a range of tobacco stocks including British American Tobacco, Philip Morris and Lorillard, which owns the Kent and Old Gold brands.

Until now, it has defended the investments by saying they do not breach any Australian or international laws.

Finance Minister Penny Wong has also refused to intervene, saying the fund’s investment decisions must remain independent from government.

In recent months its board, chaired by David Gonski, has faced intense pressure from health groups to reconsider the investments. Some overseas sovereign wealth funds have excluded themselves from tobacco, and the Future Fund previously sold its shares in defence companies that were involved in making cluster bombs.

Mr Burgess denied the decision to review the tobacco investments was influenced by public pressure or a letter from Attorney General Nicola Roxon, who as health minister last year wrote to the fund requesting it no longer invest in tobacco.

“We’re not responding to any particular issue or environment. It’s simply the board sub-committee and the board itself believe that this has come up in the normal course of review,” he said.

Mr Burgess did not say when the review would report its findings into the tobacco investments, which were worth $219 million at the end of September.

This story was found at: http://www.smh.com.au/business/future-funds-tobacco-investments-face-chop-20121025-2876v.html

3 articles on SFA

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Spain SHS entrances measurements. TC 12 11

UK SHS cars. TC 12 11

US Michigan SFA and cotinine levels. TC 12 11

The Role of Research on the Development and Implementation of Policy

Download PDF : The Role of Research on the Development and Implementation of Policy. Mackay. SRNT 2012 published

Tougher tobacco laws being drafted

http://www.bangkokpost.com/breakingnews/317932/govt-urged-to-enforce-tougher-tobacco-law

A tobacco watchdog is preparing a new tobacco control law that will lift the legal age for buying cigarettes from 18 to 20, while sellers must be over 18.

Dr Lakkana Termsirichaikul, of Mahidol University’s faculty of public health, on Monday revealed details of the proposed legislation at a press conference dubbed “Stop Using Children to Sell Cigarettes”.

She said the Tobacco Control Research and Knowledge Management Centre (TRC) was busy drafting the new law on tobacco consumption control to replace the current one which was brought in 20 years ago.

A study showed the number of smokers aged between 15-18 in the past 10 years had risen from 6.44% to 9.2% with the youngest smokers reported at the age of 6.

The new law would be aimed at protecting juveniles. About 300,00 of them became new daily smokers each year, Dr Lakkana added.

Besides raising the minimum age for buying and selling cigarettes, the significant changes to the law include:

– Those allowing minors to sell tobacco products will face a maximum one-year prison sentence and a fine of 20,000 baht.

– Banning the sale of cigarettes on the internet and closing websites associated with it.

– Banning the sale of packets containing less than 20 cigarettes and selling cigarettes individually.

– Prohibit sales promotions by tobacco companies and displaying any form of advertising and prices of cigarettes at a point-of-sale.

– State-run academic institutes must not receive financial support offered by tobacco firms, nor disseminate or promote their corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities.

The draft legislation had been approved by referendums carried out in four regions of the country. The TRC was waiting for conclusions from academics and would forward the bill to the cabinet for scrutiny, Dr Lakkana said.

THAILAND Tougher tobacco laws being drafted

http://www.bangkokpost.com/breakingnews/317932/govt-urged-to-enforce-tougher-tobacco-law

Breakingnews >

Tougher tobacco laws being drafted

Published: 22/10/2012 at 08:00 PM Online news:

A tobacco watchdog is preparing a new tobacco control law that will lift the legal age for buying cigarettes from 18 to 20, while sellers must be over 18.

Dr Lakkana Termsirichaikul, of Mahidol University’s faculty of public health, on Monday revealed details of the proposed legislation at a press conference dubbed “Stop Using Children to Sell Cigarettes”.

She said the Tobacco Control Research and Knowledge Management Centre (TRC) was busy drafting the new law on tobacco consumption control to replace the current one which was brought in 20 years ago.

A study showed the number of smokers aged between 15-18 in the past 10 years had risen from 6.44% to 9.2% with the youngest smokers reported at the age of 6.

The new law would be aimed at protecting juveniles. About 300,00 of them became new daily smokers each year, Dr Lakkana added.

Besides raising the minimum age for buying and selling cigarettes, the significant changes to the law include:

– Those allowing minors to sell tobacco products will face a maximum one-year prison sentence and a fine of 20,000 baht.

– Banning the sale of cigarettes on the internet and closing websites associated with it.

– Banning the sale of packets containing less than 20 cigarettes and selling cigarettes individually.

– Prohibit sales promotions by tobacco companies and displaying any form of advertising and prices of cigarettes at a point-of-sale.

– State-run academic institutes must not receive financial support offered by tobacco firms, nor disseminate or promote their corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities.

The draft legislation had been approved by referendums carried out in four regions of the country. The TRC was waiting for conclusions from academics and would forward the bill to the cabinet for scrutiny, Dr Lakkana said.

Tobacco smuggling falls despite industry protests over tax rises

http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/cancer-info/news/archive/cancernews/2012-10-19-Tobacco-smuggling-falls-despite-industry-protests-over-tax-rises?view=PrinterFriendly

Rates of tobacco smuggling into the UK have fallen despite earlier claims from the tobacco industry that tax rises would prompt an increase in the illicit trade, official figures show.

An estimated nine per cent of cigarettes consumed in the UK in 2010/11 were illicit, compared with 11 per cent in the previous year, according to HM Revenue & Customs.

There was also a reduction in smuggled hand-rolled tobacco, from 42 per cent to 38 per cent.

Tax revenues have simultaneously grown while the use of illicit products has declined.

Robin Hewings, Cancer Research UK’s tobacco policy manager, commented: “The tobacco industry claims that cigarette smuggling is ‘booming‘, ‘set to grow‘ and that the UK is becoming the European ‘hotspot‘.

“Today’s figures show the opposite. This is yet another instance of the tobacco industry making claims that turn out not to be true.”

Rates of tobacco smuggling have been falling for a decade now, he added.

He explained that the decline has been achieved thanks to improved enforcement and joint working between governments to prevent the tobacco industry from facilitating the illicit trade.

He said: “The tobacco industry claims that plain packs will increase tobacco smuggling.

“Independent experts are clear their claims do not make sense. Today’s figures show why it is generally best not to trust what they say.”

Tobacco duty was increased by inflation plus one per cent at the March 2010 Budget, followed by a rise of inflation plus two per cent at the March 2011 Budget.

After those two Budgets, lobbyists for the tobacco industry repeated their claims that increased taxation and tougher regulations on tobacco use would consequently increase illicit trade.

The Tobacco Manufacturers Association (TMA) suggested after the 2010 Budget that “the largest tax increase on tobacco products in 10 years” would stimulate increased illicit activity.

After the 2011 Budget the TMA referred to the tax increase as “a complete lack of joined-up thinking as taxation is the acknowledged driver of the illicit tobacco trade”.

Commenting on the latest figures, ASH chief executive Deborah Arnott said the ongoing decline of the illicit tobacco trade is “good news for the British economy”.

She added: “Once again it is clear that there is no reason to believe tobacco industry propaganda about the relationship between illicit trade, tobacco taxes, plain packaging or other tobacco control measures.”

Copyright Press Association 2012